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ABC News Senior Foreign Affairs Correspondent Martha Raddatz stands atop an F-15E Strike Eagle fighter jet at Bagram Airfield in Afghanistan, before her embed on a mission with the Air Force's 455th Air Expeditionary Wing. Raddatz is the first reporter ever to fly on a combat mission aboard an Air Force fighter jet.

Courtesy United States Air Force

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ABC News Senior Foreign Affairs Correspondent Martha Raddatz stands atop an F-15E Strike Eagle fighter jet at Bagram Airfield in Afghanistan, before her embed on a mission with the Air Force's 455th Air Expeditionary Wing. Raddatz is the first reporter ever to fly on a combat mission aboard an Air Force fighter jet.

Courtesy United States Air Force

Exclusive: Embedded on an F-15E Mission in Afghanistan

ABC News producer Richard Coolidge stands in front of a manned drone. The MC-12 is one of the Air Force's newest platforms. It does intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR).

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Col. Jack Briggs, commander of the 455th Air Expeditionary Wing, right, and F-15E pilot Col. Joe Beissner, vice commander of the 455th Air Expeditionary Wing, pose for a quick photo.

Courtesy United States Air Force

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Raddatz and Beissner take a final inspection of their jet before suiting up.

Courtesy United States Air Force

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Before her flight, Raddatz grabs her helmet and oxygen mask from her locker, just as an F-15E fighter jet crewmember would before a mission.

Courtesy United States Air Force

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Raddatz and Beissner head towards their jet. Raddatz is suited up in an ejection seat harness, a vest carrying emergency equipment, and a G-suit, which counteracts the gravitational forces in the air by placing pressure on the lower body to keep blood flowing in the upper portion of the body.

Courtesy United States Air Force

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Raddatz and Beissner review their mission plan before climbing into their F-15E fighter jet.

Courtesy United States Air Force

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ABC News producer Richard Coolidge, Raddatz, Beissner, and Hoefle pause for a photo before the flight.

Courtesy United States Air Force

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Hoefle films as Raddatz and Beissner get strapped into their fighter jet, minutes before takeoff.

Courtesy United States Air Force

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The F-15E Strike Eagle is an air-to-ground attack aircraft, and seats one pilot and one weapon systems officer. According to an Air Force fact sheet, its wingspan is 42.8 feet, its length 63.8 feet, and height 18.5 feet. It can fly up to 60,000 feet above ground. Each one costs over $31.1 million.

Courtesy United States Air Force

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The ground crew gives the final go-ahead for takeoff.

Courtesy United States Air Force

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Raddatz and Beissner taxi on the runway as they prepare for takeoff.

Courtesy United States Air Force

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Takeoff! An F-15E can go up to 20,000 feet in about 60 seconds. This one is carrying a one 2,000-pound bomb, two 500-pound laser guided bombs, three 500-pound GPS bomb, two air-to-air missiles, and 510 20mm rounds for the jet's Gatling gun.

Courtesy United States Air Force

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Raddatz snaps a photo flying sideways.

Courtesy Martha Raddatz/ABC News

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Raddatz captures a refueling mission in mid-flight. An Air Force fuel tanker, top, refuels another F-15E fighter jet, below, using a 20-foot boom. This mission is done flying more than 300 knots, more than 20,000 feet in the air.

Courtesy Martha Raddatz/ABC News

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Raddatz takes off her oxygen mask. The cockpit is pressurized, so an oxygen mask is only necessary during takeoff, landing, emergency ejection and for communicating. The pilot must wear an oxygen mask at all times.